|
||
Go to Encyclopedia of Life...
A softwooded, un- or few-branched rather palm-like tree with copious, thick, sticky, irritating milky sap; leaves very large, palmately divided into about 7 to 11 lobes, these in turn irregularly pinnatifid and toothed; petioles longer than blade, often over I m long; trees usually male or female, or some bisexual but with separate male and female flowers; male flowers about 2 em wide, white, numerous on long (30-90 cm) panicles; female flowers about 4-6 cm wide, white, subsessile, solitary of few together in leaf axils; fruit variously shaped, from subglobose and only 3-5 cm long in wild types, to cylindric and 1 m long, green turning yellow, orange, or red; flesh orange to red; seeds many, around the edges of the central cavity, small (3-4 mm thick), black, wrinkled, enclosed in a firm gelatinous membrane.
A tropical American plant, really a sort of huge herb rather than a tree; seldom over 10m tall (though one tree-seen near Kona, Hawaii, a few years ago-was at least 15m tall, was about 12-branched, and had a trunk over 1m thick.) In Guam papayas are quite common as naturalized plants in abandoned farm clearings. Generally they have small fruits, less than 5 em long in some cases, which have an insipid or even bitter taste and are quite worthless for fruits. The finest quality cultivars are rather scarce in Guam. Harmon (3892). The sap contains a meat-digesting enzyme, the principal ingredient (papain) in commercial meat-tenderizers. The fruit are sought by fanihi (fruit-bats), pigeons, and perhaps other birds.
USES: Medicinal. A few immature seeds (tenga) are swallowed to treat diarrhea (fakalele). Also, an infusion of sap from a young fruit, mixed with water, is sometimes taken for asthma (hela) and shortness of breath.
Carica papaya is native to tropical America, but is now distributed throughout the tropics. It was an early European introduction to Polynesia and quickly spread to nearly every high island in the region. Papaya is cultivated around houses and in plantations in Tonga for its delicious fruit, and often escapes to secondary forest and waste places. In addition to its value as food, various parts of the tree are employed in remedies learned mostly from the outside world. |
||
Copyright ©2018. This project is managed by the St. George Village Botanical Garden and the portal development is powered by Symbiota software. Usage Policy.
|